Mell regrets helping Blagojevich rise to power

Chicago Alderman Dick Mell will officially step down from his post representing on July 24.Associated Press

Associated Press

Retiring Chicago Alderman Dick Mell reflected Friday on his decades as a player in the city's old-school machine politics and said one of his only regrets is aiding the rise of son-in-law and former Gov. Rod Blagojevich, now in prison for corruption.

Mell helped Blagojevich make it to Congress in 1996 and later the governor's mansion, but the two men subsequently had a public falling-out that Mell said left a "terrible schism" between himself and his daughter. He said he wished he had done things differently.

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With the benefit of hindsight, "I think that he would have probably stayed a state representative," Mell said of his son-in-law.

The 75-year-old Mell handed in his resignation letter this week after 38 years as alderman in the 33rd ward on Chicago's North Side. It takes effect July 24.

He spoke with reporters at City Hall Friday about key moments including the time in 1987 when he stood on his desk demanding to be recognized as a raucous City Council session battled over who would replace Mayor Harold Washington, who had died.

Mell said his falling out with Blagojevich and the turmoil endured by his family continued to weigh on him. He said that and his wife's death were two painful episodes that blemished what he otherwise regards as a lucky and fulfilling life.

"It's difficult to tell you how I really feel," Mell said. But he said he hopes for Blagojevich that his 14-year federal prison sentence is reduced.

Turning to the future, he said he hopes his daughter, state Rep. Deborah Mell, would get serious consideration as a possible replacement for him on the City Council.

Mell said Friday that he has spoken with Emanuel about the possibility of his daughter succeeding him as alderman, but that there is "no understanding" between himself and the mayor that she will get the job.

"I think she's a very bright girl. I think she works very, very hard. But again, the mayor's going to make that choice," Mell said. "I will live with the choice that he makes."

Emanuel has promised an "open process" to choose a replacement, whom he hopes to have in office by July 24.

"I am looking for a candidate with a strong background, solid ties to the community, and a willingness to tackle the tough issues facing Chicagoans," Emanuel said in a statement this week.

Friday was the first day residents of the ward could apply for the job. Emanuel will appoint what he described as a community-based commission to vet applicants and submit a shortlist from which he will choose Mell's replacement.

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